
The buddy-cop genre has given us some iconic duos over the decades. Riggs and Murtaugh. Turner and Hooch. Axel Foley and basically everyone who had the misfortune of partnering with him. But when Disney released Zootopia in 2016, they quietly produced one of the genre’s all-time great pairings in Nick Wilde and Judy Hopps, a sly fox grifter and an overeager rabbit officer navigating a city where predator and prey were supposed to have evolved past their instincts. The film was clever, warm, and visually inventive in a way that still holds up nearly a decade later.
Fan designer 2A2A apparently noticed the same thing the rest of us have been quietly fuming about: there are no LEGO Zootopia sets. None. So they built their own, and the result is a 1,444-piece pair of brick-built figures that manage to capture Nick and Judy’s personalities in plastic with a fidelity that feels almost uncanny.
Designer: 2A2A
The two figures are the centerpiece of this submission – Nick Wilde stands at 36.4 centimeters tall (about 14.3 inches), while Judy Hopps comes in just slightly shorter at 32 centimeters (12 inches), which actually mirrors their real on-screen size difference rather neatly. Both are dressed in their first-film outfits: Nick in his signature lime Hawaiian shirt and dark tie, built from a vibrant acid-green tile arrangement that somehow reads as casual and shifty at the same time, and Judy in her ZPD officer uniform, rendered in a layered combination of blues and grays that captures the practical, buttoned-up energy of a cop who absolutely did not get this far by accident. The color work on both figures is genuinely impressive, especially considering how easy it would be to let brick geometry flatten the personality right out of these characters.
Judy’s ears, head, arms, legs, and feet are all repositionable. Nick gets posable ears, head, arms, and tail. That tail, by the way, is a small sculptural achievement in its own right, built from layered orange and brown plates that fan out and taper in a way that communicates weight and texture without a single specialized animal part. Each figure also carries a prop pulled directly from the film: Judy holds her carrot-shaped recording pen, and Nick clutches a pink pawpsicle, that frozen treat on a stick that doubles as one of his more memorable grifting tools. My favorite detail, though, is Judy’s eyes. They are the only element on either figure that uses printed parts rather than pure brick construction, and that one concession to accuracy pays off enormously. Those wide, determined purple irises anchor the whole face and make her look like Judy rather than a gray rabbit in a police vest.
The set also includes two traditional minifigures of Nick and Judy, built exclusively from official LEGO elements with custom-printed faces, alongside a display plaque finished in the style of higher-end LEGO collectors’ sets. It is a thoughtful touch that gives the whole package a sense of occasion, the kind of thing you actually want to put on a shelf rather than hide in a bin.
LEGO Ideas is the fan-powered platform where community-built MOCs gather votes, and any submission that clears the 10,000-vote threshold gets a formal review from LEGO’s internal product team, with a real shot at becoming a retail set. With a Zootopia sequel on the horizon and a fandom that has spent nearly a decade wondering why this IP never got the brick treatment it deserved, the timing for this submission feels just about perfect. Head to the LEGO Ideas page and cast your vote here!